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Moved to meta.stackoverflow.com Click here.

Official Stack Overflow Community FAQ

Questions and Answers

Reputation, Badges and Voting

Tagging

Moderation

Searching and RSS Feeds

System Information

Tweaking

Trivia

Help

Legal

How Can I Help?

  • If you have edit powers, move questions out of this question's answers and into their own questions.
  • If you can't edit yet, add your suggestions as comments on the question.
  • If you have a new unanswered question that isn't addressed here, ask it in a new question and tag it with sofaq according to the section below.
  • Link duplicate questions to the appropriate sofaq question. If you have edit powers add the following to top of the question:

    ###Duplicate of
    > [title of question](url to question)

    If you can, vote to close the question as a duplicate.


Your question not answered?

First look at questions tagged sofaq to see if there is a question not in this index that might have the answer you seek. If you still can't find an answer then:

Ask a question, make it community wiki, and tag it sofaq.

How should a question be added to this FAQ?

Questions should follow the following format:

  • bear a link back to this question named "Return to FAQ Index"
    Paste the following at the end of the question:

    [Return to FAQ Index](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18557/how-does-stackoverflow-work-the-official-faq)
    
  • be tagged as sofaq

    • When a sofaq post seems to hit a mature state, it will have the sofaq-official tag added as well. (As in, in addition to, not instead of. All sofaq questions should be searchable on the sofaq tag.)
  • be marked as community wiki (question and answers). If they are not, the community should make whatever superficial edits are needed to bring an sofaq post into community mode. (see also next point)

  • be linked to from this post in the table of contents. If it is not yet community wiki a note should be added after the link as follows:

    needs editing into community wiki

  • the question should contain only the question, stated plainly and simply, not the answer.

(Note: people are also using the sofaq-proposed tag, but considering the workflow described above for promoting sofaq questions to sofaq-official this seems redundant.)


About the sofaq overhaul project

This FAQ is currently being overhauled by a community of volunteers. Questions which are currently maintained in this monolithic FAQ are being replaced by a more modular FAQ where each FAQ question is a "Question" of its own, and each FAQ answer is an "Answer" to that question.

A few guidelines for the overhaul

The table of contents will be split for now. New "modular" FAQ questions will be referenced in this post in the first half of the table of contents. Old "monolithic" FAQ questions that haven't yet been converted will remain in their current form in the second half of the table of contents.

Each question & answer that gets "modularized" should follow the guidelines above for How should a question be added to this FAQ?

Each FAQ answer should:

  1. be coped to the appropriate question
    (If you don't have enough rep to edit and copy the markup you can view the source of any post)
  2. be prepared before the question is posted, so that it can be added immediately, with no delay.
  3. Once an answer has been modularized, please leave a comment on it requesting that the original poster delete it to help reduce the amount of clutter here.
    Example request:

    This answer has been modularized and is no longer linked to. Could it be deleted, please?

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Updated, see new section "StackOverflow Trivia" that the kind of thing that would be helpful? – Rob Cooper Sep 23 at 8:37
@Rob: I thought so too initially, but Jeff won me over on that point. Each item in the FAQ is a "Question" with an "Answer" that can change over time, and this is a Q&A site. From a findability perspective, the FAQ serves as an index. Getting questions granular as possible is a good thing. – Justin Standard Sep 24 at 13:29
Also. Surely the whole community is invited to share in this effort. The format of each granular FAQ question should be like this: The question part contains only the question, and a detailed answer should be immediately posted which answers it. The question should link back to this FAQ. – Justin Standard Sep 24 at 17:20
Thanks for the post. Very much informative. – Vijesh Sep 30 at 13:09
@All would it be OK to remove the trivia from the 'Official FAQ' I don't believe that belongs in a sort-of-official doc like this. – jjnguy Nov 5 at 19:19
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closed as "belongs on meta.stackoverflow.com" by Ólafur Waage, Juan Manuel, Pesto, TheTXI, Geo 18 hours ago

13 Answers

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Can I Answer My Own Question? What If It's Not Really a Question?

  • Yes! It's even encouraged.
  • Do phrase your issue in the form of question / answer. Pretend you're on Jeopardy.
  • It's best to actually submit an answer, rather than just answering in the question itself. This allows the answer to be voted on and evaluated fairly against other people's answers. It also keeps your question from showing up in the "unanswered questions" list when it really has an answer.
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Question: I answered my own question (stackoverflow.com/questions/205722/…), but that answer doesn't seem to be showing up on my profile in the "Answers" section. Is this by design? – Jon Schneider Oct 16 at 17:32
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So answering my own question is encouraged, but actually accepting my own answer as THE answer isn't possible. How will my question ever be listed as an answered question, then? – myplacedk Oct 27 at 12:30
@myplacedk, until an answer is upvoted, the question remains on the unanswered questions page. – Oddthinking Nov 1 at 22:53
Can I use SOFlow as a repository for my own questions and answers? Lets say I have a problem I've been working on for a while, and finally come up with an answer. Can I post the question and immediately post the answer? Or is that what my blog is for (despite the fact that it gets no traffic)? – Gaius Nov 22 at 19:07
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Note to self: Merge this with one of these questions stackoverflow.com/questions/2572/… stackoverflow.com/questions/209329/… – Sam Hasler Mar 5 at 19:44
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vote up 33 vote down

Is There a Standard for Tag Names?

  • Do not re-tag a question if you are not going to add valuable information by doing it.
  • Do not re-tag only to change the format of the tag (ie: stackoverflow -> stack-overflow). This is done automatically by the community user.
  • Don't use the "duplicate" tag, please.

See also

Tips for effectively tagging questions.

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This does not seem to indicate a standard for tag names... – Chris Marasti-Georg Sep 24 at 18:08
what about things like "best-practices" vs. "best-practice"? – Torsten Marek Sep 26 at 13:17
There's also "hash-table" and "hashtable", shouldn't this be handled by the community user? – Torsten Marek Sep 26 at 13:23
What about British vs. American spellings? Currently there are about 100 questions tagged "optimization" and 10 tagged "optimisation", for example. – mmyers Sep 30 at 21:43
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vote up 26 vote down

What Do You Call Someone that Frequents StackOverflow?

A Stacker, of course!

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1 
I was thinking StackHead – Joel Coehoorn Oct 20 at 18:42
It is better than Slacker, for sure... :-) – PhiLho Nov 21 at 16:05
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vote up 26 vote down

Accepting Answers

  • You may accept any answer on questions you asked as the 'accepted' best answer.
  • Only one answer at a time can be the 'accepted' answer.
  • You may change which answer is accepted, or simply un-accept the answer, at any time.
  • So long as any answer to your question is marked "accepted" and the answer is not yours, you will gain +2 reputation.
  • You can accept your own answer to a question after a couple days. No reputation is given to anyone in this case. No +2, no +15.
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Why can't one accept an answer to one's question. If there will be no other answers then the question will stay in the unansered status, won't it ? – Alex Shnayder Nov 6 at 19:15
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vote up 22 vote down

What Is The Average Age of a Stacker?

As of September 16, 2008, the average age of Stackers that chose to put their age in their profile is 30.1.

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vote up 18 vote down

What Is the Subjective Tag Used For?

  • To allow users who do not wish to see questions that may be argumentative.
  • To allow hot questions to be posted while trying to avoid a "holy war."
  • Note that this tag isn't necessarily meant to be used pejoratively.

NOTE:

As the StackOverflow community has evolved, many users feel the "subjective" tag should be avoided. Discussion can be great and whose thoughts are not truly subjective?

There is nothing wrong with open and potentially subjective questions so long as they are not argumentative.

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Dude, this tag should be deleted, you know that! – Rob Cooper Sep 23 at 8:03
Also, make sure you update the ToC ;) – Rob Cooper Sep 23 at 8:05
I did. I'm guessing I must have done it in between a couple of your edits, so the change got reverted. (And I agree that the tag may not be helpful. I was merely trying to document rather than make a case.) – Jason Baker Sep 23 at 8:08
No problem, I updated your answer to show this, I hope you don't mind. – Rob Cooper Sep 23 at 8:12
Not really, a question can be subjective "what do you think about this? Because?" and the answer can be objective (towards the question) still "I think this, because it will help you with x, y, z". See what I mean? :) But yeah, when you first read it, it does look like an oxymoron :) – Rob Cooper Sep 23 at 11:28
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vote up 18 vote down

What do I do if my question is never answered?

Re-tagging or editing your question will bring it back to the front page. Try editing your question to provide more information and/or clearer language. Re-tagging with tags that are more specific/appropriate could also make your question easier to find and then answer.

In addition, occasional status updates from your own search to answer the question will bump the question back to the front page.

You can also add a bounty to your question by clicking the "Bounty" link at the bottom of the question area. After adding a bounty, it will appear on the "Featured" tab.

See also

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see stackoverflow.com/questions/26049/… please delete this answer as it is redundant – Sam Hasler Nov 18 at 17:08
I would disagree, as the answer isn't in the FAQ. Now we at least have a link to an external answer, but as I understood it the FAQ is suppose to be a central repository of this information. If we delete this answer, there goes your link to the answer. – nemo Nov 21 at 15:35
I have edited my question to include a faq like answer. – nemo Nov 21 at 15:45
I did also put a link in the FAQ index, under "Questions and Answers" (sorry I should have mentioned that) so this answer is redundant. – Sam Hasler Nov 26 at 14:02
This answer is redundant, could it be deleted please? – Sam Hasler Feb 18 at 15:50
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vote up 14 vote down

Posting/Editing Times

  • You can post a second comment after 30 seconds of the first one.
  • If you edit multiple times within a time frame, the system detects it and asks for a captcha to prevent automatic posting/editing.
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The minimum time between 2 posts starts at 3 minutes. You probably need some reputation to post faster. – Rutger Nijlunsing Jun 12 at 19:06
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vote up 12 vote down

What does a star next to a question mean?

You can mark a question as a 'favorite', and it will appear on your profile under the favorite tab. This can act as a way of bookmarking questions that you might want to revisit later.

You can also see how many other people have marked the question as a favorite.

For more information, see this post.

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See stackoverflow.com/questions/166109/… – Sam Hasler Oct 21 at 18:35
This is a duplicate, could it be deleted please. – Sam Hasler Jan 22 at 22:47
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vote up 10 vote down

What measures are in place to prevent voting abuse?

In theory, dishonest users could have multiple accounts. They could use each account to vote up their other accounts.

Is there anything in place to prevent this?

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Seems like a challenge to me. Seems like you'd have to do a few things: -look at ip address -user's voting record and who they're voting for and who's voting for them – ElephantMoss Feb 12 at 15:56
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vote up 9 vote down

How do I contact the stackoverflow development team?

Similar questions:

  • Where do questions to the stackoverflow development team get posted?
  • How do I request a new feature?

ANSWER:

The correct place for suggestions like this is at meta.stackoverflow.com.

Look for a link at the bottom of the page labeled "feedback always welcome".

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Really your best bet is to ask an honest programming question, and the moderators will flock to your post. Of course it's a really chicken shit way moderation is set up, where they don't even have to post on the thread. See the man Jeff Atwoods blog for examples of his own latent boated ego. – Jesse Feb 8 at 18:24
Latent... boated ego? Uh. Okay. – Adam Bellaire Feb 13 at 2:15
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vote up 5 vote down

Posts aren't deleted, just hidden. That's why all of your deleted Questions still show up in your profile.

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What is this an answer to? – Sam Hasler Mar 25 at 15:02
And why does it have five votes? – Nosredna Jul 1 at 1:10
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vote up 5 vote down

Sometimes I see questions, answers, or comments left by "unknown (google)." Where do those come from? It doesn't seem like a normal user.

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It will be someone using the google button on the login page to sign in. I'm guessing they either don't have a name in their google account, or declined to pass it to stack overflow. – Sam Hasler Jun 2 at 12:35
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My understanding is that these have been left by someone who arrived at StackOverflow from a Google search, but hasn't logged into the site. Remember that you don't have to log into StackOverflow to start accumulating reputation, as your activity is linked by a cookie. You only need to log in if you want to make the reputation more persistent, or if you want the same account to be accessed from multiple machines. – Bevan Jul 1 at 0:48
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